Just Got Fired? Here’s What to Do First

Losing a job is a financial shock, and the first 48 hours matter most. The goal right now: stop the bleeding, buy time, and avoid decisions you’ll regret.

The first 72 hours: which bills to pay first

Cover what keeps a roof over your head and the lights on first — rent or mortgage, utilities, essential insurance. Pause everything that isn’t survival-critical.

Call lenders before you miss a payment. Many have hardship programs and will pause or lower payments if you ask early. A quick “money in vs. essential money out” list shows how many weeks of runway you have.

Bridging the income gap

File for unemployment immediately — that’s your first replacement income — and claim any severance owed to you.

If there’s still a shortfall, some bridge it with a low-interest personal loan for debt consolidation instead of high-interest cards. It can roll several balances into one lower fixed payment. Compare the total cost, not just the monthly payment.

When consolidating debt makes sense — and when it’s a trap

Debt consolidation helps when the new rate is clearly lower, you can commit to the payment, and you stop adding new debt. A debt consolidation loan is not a fix if the real problem is spending more than you earn — then it just moves debt around.

Relief programs that can help

Beyond unemployment, look into local rent and utility assistance, SNAP, and state emergency funds. For heavy debt, nonprofit credit counseling is often free, and legitimate debt relief programs can negotiate balances down — just confirm an agency is reputable before paying any fee.

Red flags: predatory lenders to avoid

Walk away from any “lender” that guarantees approval, demands fees before the loan, pressures you to decide today, or won’t put terms in writing. Payday and car-title loans turn a short gap into a long trap.

If an offer feels urgent and too easy, that urgency is the warning sign.